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Two Cy Young Awards and pair of World Series titles would be
enough to get just about anybody into the Hall of Fame. The list of pitchers
with multiple Cy Young honors is an exclusive one—and one littered with the
best pitchers in the history of baseball. Steve Carlton, Greg Maddux, Sandy
Koufax, Tom Seaver, Bob Gibson, and Randy Johnson are some of the best known
and most dominating pitchers of all time. It’s quite impressive to be named the
best pitcher in MLB more than once.

What happens when the greats of two eras collide? Look no
further than the polarizing Kobe Bryant vs. LeBron James debate. Despite the
fact that these guys consider themselves far from rivals of each other because of the generational difference, nearly
everybody else with even the smallest interest in basketball takes a side as if
these guys were Magic Johnson or Larry Bird in the NBA’s greatest rivalry.

I find it intriguing how fans and analysts of the
NBA decide one of these two players to side with. If you scroll through previous
articles here on Bases and Baskets,
it won’t take you long to figure out where I stand in that spectrum. For this discussion, though, a
reader on our Facebook page
pointed out something that piqued my interest—something more specific than a
holistic comparison of two careers that are still not finished.

There is not much of an argument to be had at this time when it comes to
statistics or a championship resume for Kobe vs. LeBron. 5 and 81 are the two
numbers cited to me by every Kobe fan in any Kobe-related argument (just read the comments of
my original Kobe vs. LeBron piece); “numbers don’t lie” is something that
favors LeBron and his supporters in just about every situation. What if the numbers were equal?
I have thrown out some hypothetical situations in the past that may not have
flied but then I came across an impossibly similar season-to-season matchup of
these two:

Statistics

Player A

Player B

Points

27.3

27.3

Rebounds

5.6

6.7

Assists

6.0

6.0

Steals

1.4

1.6

FG percentage

.463

.476

Turnovers

3.7

3.2

Minutes

38.6

40.9

Games played

78

78

PER

23.0

24.5

True Shooting %

.570

.552

Offensive Win Shares

8.4

8.0

Defensive Win Shares

1.6

5.7

Usage %

31.9

31.0

The two traditional statistics that gives each player away
for their respective seasons are the free throw percentage (Player A shot 84
percent and Player B shot 70 percent) and blocks (A: 0.3; B: 0.7). There is a difference of only one point and one assist for the respective season totals. As you
have probably ascertained by now, Player A is Kobe Bryant (2012-13 season) and
Player B is LeBron James (2006-07 season).

This is the closest possible way to
compare Kobe and LeBron directly in terms of how their individual success
translated to team success. If they are supplying nearly the same quantitative output,
then we can look to see how they impacted their team’s winning.

Statistics

2012-13 Los Angeles
Lakers

2006-07 Cleveland
Cavaliers

Record

45-37

50-32

Points per game

102.2 (6 of 30)

96.8 (19 of 30)

Opponent points per game

101.0 (22 of 30)

92.9 (5 of 30)

Strength of Schedule

1.48 (9 of 30)

3.33 (7 of 30)

This comparison is far from perfect but it certainly
provides a substantial insight into how Kobe and LeBron change the game for
their teams. Granted, Kobe was 34 years old in 2013 and LeBron was 23 in 2007
but if you call 28-29 the prime of a player’s career, they are nearly exactly
on opposite ends of the spectrum—with Kobe on the side of experience and age
compared to LeBron on the side of inexperience and a relatively fresh body. In
the end, the numbers say that both provided essentially the same productivity—although
LeBron was the better defensive player (more blocks and rebounds per
game, substantially more total DWS).

Another argument that I hear brought up frequently is the
West vs. East differential. The Western conference has proven to be the more
competitive of the two in recent memory, that's basically fact. But when talking Kobe vs. LeBron, the strength of schedule
based on SRS
shows that the 2007 Cavs and 2013 Lakers played comparably difficult regular season schedules. In fact, the
07 Cavs had a slightly more difficult schedule.

LeBron’s Cavs were clearly better than Kobe’s Lakers in the
regular season. The difference between 50 wins and 45 wins is one between a
borderline playoff team and one that is probably going to be in the hunt for a
championship...as the 07 Cavs were. Before I get to the playoff discussion—which
isn’t the easiest considering Kobe missed the 2013 playoffs with that Achilles
rupture—there is something that further distances LeBron above Kobe in what were nearly statistically equivalent seasons.

In 2013 and 2007, respectively, Kobe and LeBron both averaged close to the 48 minutes of a game—but what
about the other four players on the court with them? As I have written before, championships are the result of great teamsand, as LeBron and the 07 Cavs showed,
great individuals can only take a team so far. (The nuance I like to bring to
the table when comparing such cases is then how
far each player took their respective team). This teammate debate is where
it gets interesting…

Name

PER

MPG (Games)

Name

PER

MPG (Games)

Zydrunas Ilgauskas

18.0

27.3 (78)

Dwight Howard

19.4

35.8 (76)

Drew Gooden

16.5

28.0 (80)

Jordan Hill

18.5

15.8 (29)

Donyell Marshall

15.3

16.8 (81)

Pau Gasol

16.7

33.8 (49)

Steve Nash

16.0

32.5 (50)

Antawn Jamison

15.3

21.5 (76)

By definition,
a player-efficiency rating (PER) of 15.00 is average. With that as the standard, in 2007, LeBron played
with three above average players whereas in 2013, Kobe had five other above
average players (Jordan Hill did play only 29 games). After adjusting
for how much above average each player was using PER (ie Dwight Howard was
better than Big Z and Drew Gooden was better than Antawn Jamison), in 2013 Kobe
played with nearly 50 percent more minutes with players
above average than LeBron (45.6%).

Without that adjustment, out of a possible 192 minutes (four players
with 48 minutes per player per game), Kobe had 100 minutes of above-average
play by his teammates per game in 2013. LeBron, on the other hand, had only 70
minutes to work with. 2013 was a tough
season for the Lakers, because the injuries just didn’t stop, but would Kobe
have rather played with the guys on the 07 Cavs instead of Pau,
D12, MWP, Nash & Co.? (Answer: no.)

LeBron’s seemingly equivalent season performance is given
another edge when you look at the points per game averages. 27.3 PPG does not
equal 27.3 PPG when you consider the fact that Kobe’s Lakers were in the
top-third in team PPG (102) whereas LeBron’s Cavs were in the bottom third
(97). Teams facing LeBron had the luxury of keying in on him more so than Kobe’s
opponents could do so to him. Even though the high-paced offense that Mike D’Antoni
ran favored more PPG offensively and defensively, as the PER graphic shows, Kobe’s
teammates were better. The irony is that Kobe chooses not to use them as much.

The 07 Cavs counted on LeBron for more than one out of
every four points they scored which points to one conclusion: LeBron makes his
team better than Kobe does.

Much has been made about a “killer instinct” when it comes
to Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James. As Professor Michael Dyson
mentioned in this segment on First Take,
there is at least a partial sociological explanation for that. The fact that
Kobe and MJ have this ruthless desire to win should be celebrated, but to say that
it’s absence (or as Dyson called it, lack of refinement) means that LeBron is
inferior completely misses the mark. James' ability to make his teammates better by
facilitating their success does not come from simply a self-centered desire to win. And yet, in his
sincerity, success has followed. LeBron’s role as a leader is markedly
different from Kobe and Jordan. He won’t bash and/or ignore teammates like Kobe
and MJ…instead he’s considered working for the NBA Players Association—something
that has absolutely no self-serving purpose. If anything, it could hurt his NBA career.

That sounds all warm and fuzzy but again the truth is that this style is more successful on the court. With less
talent, a more difficult schedule, and similar statistical contributions LeBron
had more success than Kobe. A lot of this should be attributed to the
intangibles that the four-time MVP brings to the table. By making his teammates
better, he has had more success as a team and as such is a more capable winner.
Despite the inverse of the so-called “Little Man Complex” that LeBron has (in
his desire to not intimidate people because he was/is physically intimidating),
he can elevate the game of sub-par players and win more NBA games. (And this should not be interpreted as, "Kobe is not one of the greatest players of all time"...because he is.)

What about the playoffs?

This, of course, involves a little bit more extrapolation on my part because Kobe didn’t play in the 2013 playoffs. First, let’s still take a look at what LeBron James did in
2007. After spraining his ankle in the very first game
of the playoffs, James helped the Cavs power through the Washington Wizards in
a four-game sweep. He reaped the benefits of earning a number-two seed in the
East.

The second round was more difficult, but James still managed to beat a
New Jersey Nets team whose star point guard, Jason Kidd, averaged a triple-double for the entire series.

Then came the well-known Cavs vs. Pistons semifinals. The
core of this championship-savvy Pistons team (Chauncey, C-Webb, Rasheed Wallace, Tayshaun Prince,
and Rip Hamilton) were all in or around their prime and were definitely a
formidable matchup. Each of the first five games were decided by at most two
baskets. Game 5 was one of the most historic individual NBA playoff performances:
LeBron scored 29 of the final 30 points including all 18 points scored by
Cleveland after regulation had ended in what was a thrilling 2OT win.

In Game 6, Cleveland won convincingly, sending them to
the NBA Finals. Well over-matched in the Finals, the Cavs were swept by a team
stacked with not only future Hall of Fame players, but also a Hall of Fame
coach.

The point here is just how far LeBron was able to take his
below-average team.

If he didn’t blow out his Achilles, could Kobe have rallied the
Lakers through the Spurs, Warriors, and Grizzlies? If the majority of the
regular season was any indication as to the state of the Lakers, the answer is
a vehement 'no.' Two things to consider here: if you insert a 23-year-old
LeBron James for Kobe on the 2013 Lakers is the answer still no? If his
performance with a far inferior Cavalier supporting squad is any indication,
competing for a championship would be well within the realm of possibility.

Now insert (a healthy) Kobe Bryant with the 2007 Cavaliers. Kobe plus Mike Brown equals disaster as we all know; it lasted all of five games in 2013. If Kobe tells Pau Gasol to put on his big boy
pants, I doubt ESPN could air the
audio of Kobe’s hypothetically expletive-laden rant as a teammate of Donyell Marshall, Ira Newble & Co. The Kobe-Smush Parker feud got interesting in LA—now imagine Kobe with a
team of Smush Parkers…

Kobe said it himself in a long Facebook post responding to that feud: leadership is responsibility. What he misses is that his method may work when he is
playing with great players...but what about when it’s more difficult than getting
future Hall of Famers to co-exist (and can he even do that? *cough Shaq*). Not
every NBA team has great talent and might not have the best player so is it as
simple as saying “I’d rather be perceived as a winner than a good teammate”?
The standards for a great player are on another level because they are so great…and
this is a fact that most NBA stars don’t realize. But it’s exactly why most great NBA players don’t
make it as coaches. Kobe’s “way” has gained him a lot of fame but
look over at what LeBron James has done and you’ll see his leadership ability is on a different level.

As Prof. Dyson said in the First Take video, LeBron is a “philosopher of the game” and
somebody that has taken it beyond simply winning the game. His “commitment to
the team spectacle is what makes [LeBron] different [from Kobe].”

The back-to-back titles and success in 2007 (among other
seasons) elucidate that LeBron's goal of winning is far from lost. He may not be the “in-your-face”
leader that Kobe is so proud to be, but four MVPs and back-to-back Finals MVPs
before age 30 speaks for itself.